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Enjoy.
Guess what didn't open.
Yes seems the old GM plant in Oklahoma City which was stripped out by GM will have a new owner. Right here in the heartland of America they will built a MG owned by a Chinese company.
It will be entertaining to say the least and if it does work out and the MG TF Convertible is a good car heck I may just have to buy one!
Donna
Nasty talk Donna!! But O.K. for OK.
Chuck
Back in the 1970s, MG made one last dispairing attempt to regain the position it had enjoyed as the quintessential sports car. The press was invited to a spot in (IIRC) the Arizona desert, where the latest model was dropped from a C130 by parachute in a great publicity stunt, filmed by the world's TV stations.
Guess what didn't open.
I've owned four MGs, and each one had a unique character.
My TD was a great improvement on the TC that introduced many Americans to the concept of a sports car - independent front suspension, coil springs up front instead of cart springs, hydro shocks, somewhat more comfort but you still felt connected to the road. I had a neighbor who had worked at the MG distributor and had the works tuning book, so he and I took it to stage 3, which was supposed to add some 40hp. Shortly after this I decided to find out what she could do on the M1 Motorway, and unfortunately ran a rod bearing at over 100.
My 1952 YB saloon (essentially a TD with a 4-door saloon body) was really plush: green leather seats, wood dash, 4-wheel hydro jacking system (a great idea that never caught on) and real wind-up windows. Cecil Kimber must have had a fetish about octagons that would have given a psychologist enough material for a book. Octagonal oil filler. Octagonal dipstick handle. Octagonal radiator cap. Octagonal pedal rubbers. Octagonal badges in the steering boss and hub caps. Probably some that I've forgotten. I think that he would have made the wheels octagonal if he could have worked out a way.
MGB and MGB GT, both chrome-bumper models; the 50% increase in engine size was a great step forward. Pity they didn't do the same for the TD and TF. I almost bought a TF, one of the very last of the production and one of the few that had the 1500cc engine. Wish I had. It would be worth an easy 6-figures today. Coulda, shoulda, mighta. That's life.